Update on 2020 QB commit JD Johnson who had to medically retire in HS

Submitted by 42-27 on May 4th, 2024 at 11:59 AM

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Remember JD Johnson? He was a QB commit to Jim Harbaugh & the Wolverines in the class of 2020. JD received an agonizing diagnosis prior to his arrival on campus - a rare heart condition known as "Coarctation of the Aorta.” 

"I was told that I did not meet the clearance standard to continue playing a contact sport for fear that my aorta could rupture," Johnson wrote, "or that not enough blood would get to my brain causing an on field stroke." JD's playing days were over... but his Michigan football story did not end there.

"Coach Harbaugh called after receiving the news of my test results. Unsure and scared to what the conversation was going to be, Coach, without hesitation, said that my scholarship would be honored and offered me a position to join the Wolverine staff and help anyway I can. I am witness to Coach Harbaugh’s character and integrity in a situation where he has every reason to tell me, 'Good luck with your future.' He means what he says, and stands behind his commitments, when he could have taken the easy way out. He demonstrated a high level of loyalty to a player that will never throw a touchdown pass for him."

JD has been a part of the staff since, often being seen with the quarterbacks... He is a 3 time Big Ten Champion, a National Champion, & as of today, a University of Michigan graduate.

Congrats to you JD! Forever, a Michigan Man!

yoyo

May 4th, 2024 at 12:06 PM ^

Surprising they didn't find his coarctation till then. I would've thought he'd show some symptoms playing football at a high level. 

uminks

May 4th, 2024 at 12:16 PM ^

Congrats getting your degree JD.  If JD had a healthy heart, I wonder if he would be the starting QB? He would have gotten an extra COVID season.

BTB grad

May 4th, 2024 at 12:47 PM ^

This clip resurfaced during the NFL Draft regarding how footage of Spencer Rattler in the Netflix series QB1 still has an impact on how front offices view Rattler. The clip is of Rattler having an exchange with high school teammate JD Johnson which reflects very poorly on Rattler. This is why you should never go on reality TV, but especially before your frontal lobe is fully developed and definitely not before you're 18. Rattler might've matured and grown up but that footage from when he was 17 will never go away.

BigBlue07

May 5th, 2024 at 4:09 PM ^

I watched that show years ago and Spencer Rattler was such big asshole it still sticks out in my mind to this day. I here or see him I associate it with what I saw on this show. He literally shows you what you don’t want in a QB. Tate Martell showed that aswell in his QB 1 show. 

Wendyk5

May 4th, 2024 at 1:15 PM ^

I see someone act like this and I think this is exactly how some adult treated him at some point when he was younger. This is learned behavior. Some adult did him wrong. (the other day, I was driving and heard females yelling at each other. I thought it was two teenagers fighting. I looked over to see a mother and daughter walking down the street. The mother hit the teen girl, who was probably 15, and screamed at her, "That was a dumbass move! You're a dumbass!" And I thought this is how it's perpetuated)

MH20

May 4th, 2024 at 2:11 PM ^

That or he'd been told his entire formative years how amazing he was and that nothing was ever his fault.

Either way, a sad development. I wonder if his struggles at OU and South Carolina humbled him at all. He was supposed to be a surefire #1 pick coming out of HS.

Wendyk5

May 4th, 2024 at 8:34 PM ^

I know a kid who was a talented athlete but whose parents told him he was better than everyone else and that pretty much sunk him. He just couldn't work hard and take any kind of direction, and he flamed out early in high school. They had such lofty dreams for him (telling him when he was in middle school he might be playing football for Oregon someday) and didn't take into account his lack of maturity or the fact that talent is great but if you can't grind it out, no coach is going to want to deal with you. And he certainly wasn't talented enough for a coach to look the other way on that. 

Amazinblu

May 4th, 2024 at 12:52 PM ^

Culture.. the definition of leadership - begin at the top.

I wonder how many SEC teams would have honored the academic aspect of a scholarship if this situation had arisen with one of their prospects.

Wolverine 73

May 4th, 2024 at 1:07 PM ^

This says a lot about JD, but even more about Harbaugh.  When sleazy promises for illusory playing time and NIL seem commonplace, it is refreshing to see such character in a coach.  Not only a winner on the field, but a shining example to the kids who play for him.

rob f

May 4th, 2024 at 1:54 PM ^

JD is truly an a-MAIZE-ing young Michigan Man for having persevered, despite the disappointment he surely felt when he learned of his heart condition.  

And it reflects on the kind of leader Coach Harbaugh is.  The NCAA, the Harbaugh haters, Tiny Peteetee, the whole bunch of them can kiss my heinie.

jsquigg

May 4th, 2024 at 3:22 PM ^

And yet some continue to label him a cheater while excusing others who either fostered abuse or brazenly broke recruiting rules for years.